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ADELAIDE’S ONLINE DAI LY NEWS PAP ER Wednesday 26th August 2009 AM EDI TION | FREE SUBSCRIBE HTTP://WWW.INDAILY.COM.AU Sex health company under attack The company notorious for its ‘’longer lasting sex’’ advertisements has faced a barrage of accusations from some of the country’s most renowned sexual health experts. Yesterday an injunction taken out by the Advanced Medical Institute in June was partially varied by the Supreme Court to enable coverage of a House of Representatives hearing last Friday. litany of allegations over predatory tactics and unethical medical practices in his erectile dysfunction clinics, known for their nasal spray treatments. Chris McMahon, the director of the Australian Centre for Sexual Health, told the hearing that AMI was ‘’concerned with its balance sheet rather than patient need’’ and that the practice of prescribing medicines over the telephone was a ‘’casual, cavalier, careless and expedient’’ approach. AMI’s chief executive and founder, Ukrainian-born medical entrepreneur Jack Vaisman, was silent during the five-hour hearing as the standing committee on health and ageing heard a IN BRIEF Man tries to open door on plane Qantas staff had to subdue a man who tried to open the door of a flight making its descent into Sydney airport early this morning, a fellow passenger said on arrival. to stand up and move around the plane for about ten minutes during the descent, the witness who was about two rows away said, but staff managed to reseat him. -AAP Scramble to replace Nelson The political scrambling for the safe parliamentary seat of outgoing Liberal MP Brendan Nelson has begun. The man, who was clearly agitated, had been trying Dr Nelson, a former minister for education and defence in the Howard government, announced yesterday that he would quit politics next month. Names being bandied about as possible replacements include the long-serving former John Howard chief of staff, Arthur Sinodinos, and Tom Switzer, another former senior Liberal adviser. Youth allowance back down The Rudd Government has backed down over its controversial changes to student income support that would have seen many “gap-year” students struggle to survive at university next year. Education Minister Julia Gillard says the changes will be delayed six months for people on a gap year in 2009 who have to move to attend university. But the opposition says the changes don’t go far enough and students will still miss out on crucial support. David Handelsman, Concord Hospital’s ANZAC Research Institute’s head of andrology, said AMI’s advertising was pernicious and destructive, and its claims of efficacy for its erectile dysfunction treatments were a carefully constructed legal fiction. Mr Vaisman’s legal representative, who is also an AMI shareholder, Richard Doyle, denied the allegations. - Fairfax HENDRIK GOUT - WOOLWORTHS HARDWARE